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So we don't clog the Novice to Amateur thread, there's a topic that sounded like it was good for discussion:
So, with everything you have to during a race, how do you use reference points to get faster? I know they help you to "try" and find the fastest lines, etc... Is there anything else the people running 20's and lower look for?
Well, for starters....
Brake ON markers
Brake OFF markers
Throttle ON markers
Throttle OFF markers
Shift markers
Turn-in markers
"Flip" markers (L-R or R-L transitions)
Apex markers
Exit markers
"Aim" markers
"Avoid" markers
You should have them all and you should be able to draw them on a map or at least see them in your mind as you do a mental lap around the track.
Experiment by moving one (or two at the most) and see what works.
Last edited by OreoGaborio; 03-15-11 at 04:40 PM.
-Pete
NEMRR #81 - ECK Racing
Cyclesmith Track Days
Woodcraft | MTag-Pirelli | OnTrack Media
'03 Tuono | '06 SV650 | '04 CRF250X | '24 Aprilia Tuareg
Reference points do exactly what the name implies. They don't make you fast, they just help locate you in YOUR frame of reference so that you can make informed decisions. You don't just huck your bike into a corner on an unknown line at an unknown speed. If you try that, you will most certainly crash or come out of the corner slow and scared shitless.
Instead, you build a frame of references that help you get an accurate idea of your speed and trajectory. You use your past experiences to help you decide if you can mae the corner, open the throttle, adjust your line etc.
Once you have built this detailed framework, you can increase your pace by making very small changes in braking and acceleration inputs without taking unknown risks.
So, are most of these "automatic" for you? Are they more like an unconscious thing?
I do some of that (thinking, "I have to brake now, etc...), but wondered how much of your thought process goes into it during a race.
Very well said, Paul!
Chuck, my mind is pretty much 100% occupied with three things... reading the riders around me and hitting my marks.
Last edited by OreoGaborio; 03-15-11 at 04:50 PM.
-Pete
NEMRR #81 - ECK Racing
Cyclesmith Track Days
Woodcraft | MTag-Pirelli | OnTrack Media
'03 Tuono | '06 SV650 | '04 CRF250X | '24 Aprilia Tuareg
Subscribed.
Oops, sorry, didn't realize there was a laptime threshold to post in this thread.
Cliff's Cycles KTM
NETRA enduro B-vet
Close your eyes, look deep in your soul, step outside yourself and let your mind go.
These do become somewhat automatic after say 10,000 laps. But there's is no shortcut to building the frame. It takes years. The good news is that once you do it once, you can do it quickly at new tracks. Do the work, reap the benefits. Skip the work, and struggle for your whole career. Start drawing you mind map now away from the track (no peeking at pictures or videos), and you'll see where you are lacking pretty easily.
'02 SV650 street|woods|race LRRS #128
What's the 3rd?
IMO, a reference point should be something you KNOW isn't gonig to move on you. A rock on the ground is not one of them, neither is a cone.
Find things such as markings on the pavement, features in the curbing, something you notice in your peripheral vision, dotted lines, etc.
I suggest doing a track walk following a trackday or race practice because you don't wanna be in a race session searching for reference points and more or less target fixating on that while the guy in front of you is parking it in a corner.
Some one posted an article from Eric W. and its all you need to read on reference points...
LRRS EX 66
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Yup. Interpret that however you wantOriginally Posted by brady
A - those two add up to three things
2 - the rest is insignificant
D - the first rule about third thing club...
Blue - other
Last edited by OreoGaborio; 03-16-11 at 10:40 AM.
-Pete
NEMRR #81 - ECK Racing
Cyclesmith Track Days
Woodcraft | MTag-Pirelli | OnTrack Media
'03 Tuono | '06 SV650 | '04 CRF250X | '24 Aprilia Tuareg
Not automatic and changing the faster you get. 2 words Track Walk.
Let us take turn 1. I used to brake at the 4 board and think "I need to turn now"
Then it was "Let's try the low line and brake at the 3 board"
Then it was lets aim for the orange box after hitting the little crack at the middle of the track near the 2 board, good stab of brakes there, trailing off..., coming down closer to the flagger station and lining up with the new pavement "chute" in 1.
Or in 3.
Line up with the cones, brake at the first cone, throw it in somewhere and pray.
Squeeze the tank, brake 2 cones in, trail it off, set up, turn in at the 2nd to last cone, look for the beach, knee over rumble strips, transition, Look to the 4 cone, lil power, tranistion, aim at left of 4 cone full power...
My point is that I started with none and I bet I have about 1/2 of what Pete and Paul have for points. Eric gave me too many to write down when i took the advanced school. That alone was worth the cost of the course.
Last edited by Doc; 03-15-11 at 05:51 PM.
"I'd rather ride a slow bike fast than a fast bike slow"
Bikes: Ducati: 748 (Track) Honda: RC31 (Race/street)/ CRF 110 Mini Moto/ Hawk Endurance Racer Kawasaki: ZXR1200R
BOMO Instructor
EX# X
I know I don't have near the experience to be offering any advice but I really found that timing a "mental lap" helped me determine where I need some more reference points. I found a couple spots I thought I knew pretty well that I couldn't visualize clearly.
A lot of good info here.
Reference points are the hurdle many riders struggle with. Some riders are resistant to establishing precise RPs and prefer to ride by feel. But, riding by feel can only take you so far. Once RPs are well-defined and practiced, then they become an integral part of how you ride. That's when RPs can reside mostly in your subconscious so you can get on with the real business of racing.
FYI, if you want to learn firsthand from Paul or Pete or Gino (or me) about this stuff, sign up for personalized instruction.
Persoanlized Instruction with Tony's Track Days
Cones are fine as long as you do a sighting lap and verify that your cones are in the right places. Most tracks have painted marks to locate the cones.
Cracks and marks on the pavement are good as long as they don't draw your attention down and in closer to your front wheel. I actually gave up using cracks and track marks unless they where on and uphill section of track or in my field of view way up ahead. I do think learning all the cracks at loudon helped me though. Just had to give up using a few of them.
I would think the race line would change some, as you get faster.... So would said RP's....
I remember one race someone took out all the cones into T3. I was a little lost going in the first lap, but there was a yellow flag and I was off pace so it didn't matter. When the CWs put the cones back, they didn't put the 2nd to last cone (which is my tip in point) in the right place. I was a mess that turn for the rest of the race. I ran wide, I hit the curb, I did about everything wrong you can do there without crashing. Showed on my lap times too. Funny thing is, it looked right. I can't imagine it was more than a few inches off, a foot max.
This is in no way a slight on the CWs, I'm sure putting them back mid-race after someone just flew off track into where they were now standing was a bitch. Just a comment about how a cone being a little off can really screw with ya, hence my preferring to use fixed markers where I can. That said, I still use the cones for 3 & 4.
Here's a lengthy conversation I had on another board regarding reference points and other things with Misti, an instructor with the California Superbike School... Sorry it got so wordy.
I'll just copy & paste so it's here instead of linking to the thread. Feel free to discuss.
-Pete
NEMRR #81 - ECK Racing
Cyclesmith Track Days
Woodcraft | MTag-Pirelli | OnTrack Media
'03 Tuono | '06 SV650 | '04 CRF250X | '24 Aprilia Tuareg
I hear you, Paul, however I don't agree with using cones since there are cases where they are tagged by riders and end up moving some distance in any given direction. Not sure if the T2 layout will be the same as last year but that turn is one example of people tagging cones where the cones move. When the new pavement was layed this proved to be a bit of an issue at one of our trackdays where people were cutting the corner. It was like the cones had legs. You'd come thru once and be fine, the very next lap "WHOA! Who moved that cone 4 feet up and out??!?"
As far as the cracks and such, in the past I've explained to riders that they don't want to look directly at their reference points rather use their peripheral vision which, with time and practice, allows them to essentially see two places at one time while allowing them to keep their eyes up and looking forward.
I've found that yes, riders naturally slow their pace at first in order to readjust to the new approach. Some people do one track session and get frustrated because they've had to scrub all their precious speed in order to practice something new and that is usually quickly followed by them riding like crap all over again as a result of being comfortable with previous habits that don't include reference points.
On the flipside, others tend to be much more patient and actually get comfortable with using their newfound vision within the day. Their riding chages dramatically in that they become smooth, predictable and very quick by day's end.
Realizing that everone is different, what works for some might not work for others. That said, I know the method I use certainly is not gospel.
dude Chuck started it, the threshold is pretty liberal.
this is something I keep struggling with. I know I have reference points but for a lot of the turns its hard for me to actually think of them off the top of my head. I wanna get more RPs but for some reason I never seem to actually work on it once on the bike. Maybe racing will help with this, I don't know.
LRRS Am #331
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Even going as "slow" as I do around NHMS, soe of my reference points have changed. Example, when I used to do 1:30's, I would brake at the 4 board into T1. Now, I'm between the 2 and 3 boards at 1:26's.
What's the limit to how far in a reference point can be? When you hit the pavement?
He said he wanted input from guys under 1:20.
I'm just happy to learn I WAS doing the right thing, before somebody told me I was wrong, and needed rp's on track. I'll go back to using the signs up on the walls, trees, and other immovable stuff too. (and braking at the treehouse at the end of the wall)
Cliff's Cycles KTM
NETRA enduro B-vet
Close your eyes, look deep in your soul, step outside yourself and let your mind go.